Public Speaking : 
Gags (with Audience Helpers)
Audience gags
are offbeat jokes that occur unexpectedly during a presentation. Dr. Joel Goodman,
from the Humor Project, does one where a telephone rings during his presentation.
He answers the phone that was hidden in the lectern and pretends to talk to
his mother. The same joke would be called a running gag if the phone rang at
several other times during the program.
Ten
Wanted Men
I staged a gag at a seminar one time that was loads of fun and took less than
one minute to complete. Before the public speaking program, I picked out about
10 fun-loving audience members to help me. I gave them secret instructions that
were to be carried out on a certain cue during the program. To start the gag,
I had my assistant interrupt the seminar to give me an important note. The note
read (I used a serious expression):
It
appears that someone is in attendance today with another man's wife. There
is a large and irate man on his way here right now. If you want out, there
is a backstage door you can use to escape quickly.
At this point,
10 men jumped up out of their seats and ran keystone cop style out the door.
Once they realized what was happening, several women jumped up and ran out too.
It was great fun and the gag sure woke up everyone who had a heavy lunch.
Stone
the Speaker
Here's another gag I do when I really want to focus attention on an important
point in my public speaking. Either before the public speaking program or at
a break, I recruit audience members who are sitting near the front. I give each
one a piece of crumpled paper and instruct them to throw it at me when they
hear a certain word in my public speaking.
Some presenters
tell me that is the dumbest thing they ever heard and that they would never
do it in a professional public speaking presentation. They say that until they
understand the rationale. I use this gag when I want to focus attention on an
important point? Guess who is riveted on what I say until they hear the key
word? Of course, all the recruits with the crumpled paper. Then, after they
throw the paper and I make a big reaction, the rest of the crowd is totally
focused in their effort to see what is going on. That is when I make my key
point. I have virtually guaranteed the attention towards my public speaking
of each audience member.
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